Saturday, August 3, 2019
The United States Needs a Terrorism Czar :: Argumentative Persuasive Essays
      The United States Needs a Terrorism Czar            Introduction           Drug trafficking activity and terrorism activity have much in common.   Both drugs and terrorism have strong national security and law enforcement  components, they have military components, border control components, economic  and trade components, medical components, and agricultural components.   Today there are some 50 federal agencies with some degree of counterdrug  responsibilities and at least 12 federal agencies with important  counterterrorism responsibilities.  This paper examines one model for  unifying them under an executive branch, White House director's office, as  outlined below.           Drug trafficking and terrorism are illegal clandestine activities with strong  national security and law enforcement threat components and operational  similarities.  Terrorists like drug traffickers, need weapons and engage in  violence to achieve goals.  Terrorists, like drug traffickers, are often  involved in hiding and laundering sources of funds.  Both terrorists and  drug traffickers operate transnationally, and often get logistical and  operational support from local ethnic satellite communities.  Both groups  often rely on the criminal community for support: they may need smuggled  weapons, forged documents and safe houses to operate effectively.  Finally,  both groups need a steady cash flow to operate.  In the case of terrorists,  where state sources of funding are rapidly diminishing, drug trafficking is an  attractive funding option. Increasingly, terrorist organizations are looking to  criminal activity and specifically the drug trade as a source of funding.   The FARC    (Revolutionary Armed Forces, a guerilla force) in Colombia are but one  of many cases in point.           Some experts have looked to the "drug czar" model in seeking to reform  government structures to fight terrorism.  Counternarcotics efforts have  forced local, state and federal agencies to build operable, cooperative,  inter-agency relationships. The need to build and maximize similar relationships  to deal with terrorism exists and some have suggested that the "Drug Czar"  [White House Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP)] model may have  applicability to the counterterrorism arena. Legislation is currently before  Congress on this issue [H.R. 4210].  It appears that the bill will not be  enacted this year but will likely be reintroduced next term.                 Another structural option might require that federal departments and agencies  make their counterterrorism capabilities available for the efforts of the  terrorism director.  					    
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